I’ve started to notice how much of Web3 assumes that users are comfortable being exposed as long as the system works. But that trade off doesn’t always feel realistic, especially outside crypto native circles.

That’s what made me pause on Midnight Network. It doesn’t frame privacy as an extra feature you toggle on later. It treats it as part of the system from the beginning. The use of Zero Knowledge Proofs means you can interact, verify, and participate without turning your data into something permanently visible.

What I find interesting is how this changes the role of the user. Instead of being transparent by default, you’re in control of what gets revealed and when. The system still maintains integrity, but it doesn’t assume openness is always acceptable.

Even NIGHT seems to operate within that same mindset supporting the network without pulling focus away from the underlying idea.

It makes me wonder if the next phase of blockchain isn’t about scaling visibility, but about refining it deciding what actually needs to be seen, and what doesn’t.

#night $NIGHT @MidnightNetwork

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